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My top 5 things to do at Congress 2017

Guest blog by Mohamed Lachemi, President and Vice Chancellor, Ryerson University

There is so much at Congress 2017 that it would be impossible to get to everything. What are the must-sees during your visit to Ryerson and Toronto? It is difficult to choose, but here is a list of my top 5 things to do at Congress 2017.

1. If you don’t see anything else, explore these buildings on our campus – Ryerson Image Centre, Mattamy Athletic Centre and the Student Learning Centre. They are some of our newest and most exciting additions to campus.

You won’t be able to miss the Ryerson Image Centre, adorned just recently with an enormous panorama of iconic Canadian personalities including Buffy Sainte-Marie, Pierre Trudeau and Mary Pickford. The Centre is for the research, teaching and exhibition of photography and related media, and is famously home to the Black Star Collection of 250,000 photographs spanning 80 years of photojournalism. During Congress, the Suzy Lake exhibition is featured.

The Mattamy Athletic Centre is the award-winning result of a massive restoration of the former Maple Leaf Gardens. Historic elements of the building are meticulously retained within a design that makes for a working and lively athletic centre for our students, including an NHL-sized ice rink. The building is open to the public. One of the displays features the Gardens’ original time capsule from 1931 -- a surprise discovery during the renovation.

Walk into our Student Learning Centre (SLC) on Yonge Street and see what a 21st-century university space looks like. Built with student input, the SLC is a space for students to collaborate, study and explore new ideas. Through design and function, the building is also helping to transform Toronto’s downtown core.

2. Ryerson is an urban university, so make time to visit unique Toronto neighbourhoods minutes from our campus – such as Queen Street West, Graffiti Alley, Chinatown, Little India, the Distillery District, Kensington Market, the Waterfront, Sugar Beach and Toronto Island, to name a few.

4. Ryerson Presents… programming is unique to Congress. See the Indigenous tipi art installation; visit the exhibit Contested Lands, Canada at 150 from our Modern Literature and Culture Research Centre, which explores hidden voices in our history; tour the DMZ, the #1 ranked university-based incubator in North America; hear Ryersonians in conversation about issues of the day -- Kamal al-Solaylee, journalist and associate professor at the Ryerson School of Journalism; Peter Bregg, renowned photojournalist and 2016 Order of Canada recipient; and April Lindgren, associate professor at the Ryerson School of Journalism.

5. Above all, make the most of Congress opportunities: connect, network and have fun.

This list could be much longer, and I guarantee that whatever your interest, there is an opportunity to explore it at Congress 2017 hosted by Ryerson. Enjoy, and I hope to see you here!